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Perspective
Shreyas, Preyas
and Gregory Roberts’ Shantaram
by
Satya Chaitanya
I have just begun reading Gregory David Roberts’ recent classic and
international bestseller Shantaram. The Kathopanishad speaks of
the twin concepts of shreyas and preyas – shreyas as lasting good and
preyas as immediate satisfaction. For the Upanishad, shreyas is the road
less travelled and preyas, the widely travelled road. Fools, says the
teacher of the Upanishad, choose the path of preyas and wise ones,
shreyas.
The Upanishad, of course, is speaking of shreyas and preyas in the
ultimate sense, in the spiritual sense. But the concepts are applicable
to all situations in life. For instance, since I teach a course in
organizational leadership in one of India’s top business schools, I
frequently talk about how an organization can go wrong by focusing on
immediate satisfaction and forgetting long term good and how it can
benefit from never losing sight of shreyas even when occupied with
preyas. Reading Shantaram, I came across a beautiful passage, in which
the author speaks about shreyas and preyas,, though the terms themselves
are unknown to David for all I know.
On arrival in Bombay, Lindsay, the narrator and central character of the
book, meets two Canadian tourists during their bus journey from the
airport. Guided by a local guide, they take a room in an inexpensive
hotel. It is a room with three beds that they share in order to save
money. Later, in their room, one of the Canadians says:
“We could’a beat that manager down on the price of this room. It’s
costin’ us six bucks for the day. We could’a beat him down to four. It’s
not a lotta money, but it’s the way they do things here. You gotta beat
these guys down, and barter for everything… You gotta beat ‘em down,
man. If you don’t learn that, if you don’t start thinkin’ like
that, they’re gonna fuck you over, these people. The Indians in the
cities are real mercenary, man. It’s a great country, don’t get me
wrong. That’s why we come back here. But they’re different than us.
They’re ... hell, they just expect it, that’s all. You gotta beat
‘em down.”
In response, the author reflects:
“He was right about the price of the room, of course. We could’ve saved
a dollar or two per day. And haggling is the economical thing to do.
Most of the time, it’s the shrewd and amiable way to conduct your
business in India.
“But he was wrong, too. The manager, Anand, and I became good friends,
in the years that followed. The fact that I trusted him on sight and
didn’t haggle, on that first day, that I didn’t try to make a buck out
of him, that I worked on an instinct that respected him and was prepared
to like him, endeared me to him.
“He told me so, more than once. He knew, as we did, that six of our
dollars wasn’t an extravagant price for three foreign men to pay. The
owners of the hotel received four dollars per day per room. That was
their base line. The dollar or two above that minimum was all Anand and
his staff of three room boys shared as their daily wage. The little
victories haggled from him by foreign tourists cost Anand his daily
bread, and cost them the chance to know him as a friend.”
I believe that is a beautiful lesson in shreyas vs preyas.
You save a dollar, but you lose a friend.
I loved Gregory Roberts’ final comment on this episode.
“The simple and astonishing truth about India and Indian people is that
when you go there, and deal with them, your heart always guides you more
wisely than your head. There’s nowhere else in the world where that’s
quite so true.”
The problem with most of us is that we believe it is our head we should
trust and not our heart; it is our head that is wiser, and smarter, than
our heart. The head may be smarter than the heart, but it is rarely
wiser than it and whenever there is a conflict, I have learnt that it is
our heart that we should be guided by, rather than our head.
Incidentally, speaking from the standpoint of evolution, that part of
our brain which we usually refer to as our heart, the seat of our
impulses, instincts, feelings, emotions and so on, is much older than
what we call our head. Our ‘head’ is the neo-cortex, the last part of
our brain to evolve. Our ‘heart’ is situated in our mammalian brain,
which is much older than the neo-cortex, and much wiser.
~*~
There is another important lesson for all of us who are willing to learn
from life, and literature which is a mirror to life, here. A lesson in
how we generate trust in people, a lesson in transforming our world.
An old, old Greek tale tells us that Aesop, of the Fables, was
standing with his friends at the gates of Athens one day when a traveler
from another city reached there. Seeing Aesop and his friends, the
traveler greeted them and spoke to them. “Tell me,” said the
traveler, “What kind of people live in Athens? Good people you can
trust, or…” Aesop looked at the man for a moment or two and then
said, “The worst kind! All rogues and criminals.” The man
listened to the answer and moved on towards the city, since he had
business there which could not be avoided.
Not five minutes had passed when another traveler reached the gates and
asked the same question. Again Aesop looked at the man for a moment or
so and said, “The best kind! You will find them the most
wonderful people in the world.” With a happy smile, the man walked
towards the city.
To one man Aesop had said that the people of Athens were the worst kind
and to another he had said they were the most beautiful people in the
world. And the two answers were given within five minutes of each other.
Puzzled, one of his friends asked Aesop why he had done so.
And he said, “The people of our city are neither good nor bad. They
are like people everywhere – a mixture of good and bad. But because of
his negative disposition, to the first man they would be bad, and again,
because of his disposition, to the second man, they would be wonderful
people.”
Gregory Roberts observes in Shantaram:
“The fact that I trusted him on sight and didn’t haggle, on that
first day, that I didn’t try to make a buck out of him, that I worked on
an instinct that respected him and was prepared to like him, endeared me
to him.”
Our world is created by us. It is we who make our world what it is to
us. It is we who decide whether the world is trustworthy or not. We can
transform the world into a wonderful place, or we can make it hell,
depending on how we deal with it.
September 12, 2009 p>
Image under license with Gettyimages.com
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